Elsevier

Lung Cancer

Volume 141, March 2020, Pages 89-96
Lung Cancer

Cost-effectiveness of stereotactic body radiation therapy versus video assisted thoracic surgery in medically operable stage I non-small cell lung cancer: A modeling study

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.lungcan.2020.01.011Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Average discounted 5.81 QALYs for VATS and 5.86 QALYs for SBRT were found.

  • The average undiscounted costs of VATS are €29,269 versus €21,175 for SBRT.

  • SBRT is dominant in at least 74 % up to 94 % of the simulations.

Abstract

Objectives

Stage I non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) can be treated with either Stereotactic Body Radiotherapy (SBRT) or Video Assisted Thoracic Surgery (VATS) resection. To support decision making, not only the impact on survival needs to be taken into account, but also on quality of life, costs and cost-effectiveness. Therefore, we performed a cost-effectiveness analysis comparing SBRT to VATS resection with respect to quality adjusted life years (QALY) lived and costs in operable stage I NSCLC.

Materials and methods

Patient level and aggregate data from eight Dutch databases were used to estimate costs, health utilities, recurrence free and overall survival. Propensity score matching was used to minimize selection bias in these studies. A microsimulation model predicting lifetime outcomes after treatment in stage I NSCLC patients was used for the cost-effectiveness analysis.

Model outcomes for the two treatments were overall survival, QALYs, and total costs. We used a Dutch health care perspective with 1.5 % discounting for health effects, and 4 % discounting for costs, using 2018 cost data. The impact of model parameter uncertainty was assessed with deterministic and probabilistic sensitivity analyses.

Results

Patients receiving either VATS resection or SBRT were estimated to live 5.81 and 5.86 discounted QALYs, respectively. Average discounted lifetime costs in the VATS group were €29,269 versus €21,175 for SBRT. Difference in 90-day excess mortality between SBRT and VATS resection was the main driver for the difference in QALYs. SBRT was dominant in at least 74 % of the probabilistic simulations.

Conclusion

Using a microsimulation model to combine available evidence on survival, costs, and health utilities in a cost-effectiveness analysis for stage I NSCLC led to the conclusion that SBRT dominates VATS resection in the majority of simulations.

Abbreviations

NSCLC
Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer
VATS
Assisted Thoracic Surgery
SBRT
Stereotactic Body Radiation Therapy
RCT
Randomized controlled trial
RFS
recurrence-free survival
OS
overall survival
CEA
cost-effectiveness analysis
DOD
Death of Disease
DOC
death due to other causes
LY
life-years
QALY
Quality-adjusted Life Year
ICER
incremental cost-effectiveness ratio
RWD
real world data

Keywords

SBRT
VATS
Cost-effectiveness
Microsimulation
NSCLC

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